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|group      = Aboriginal Kiravites
|group      = Aboriginal Kiravites
|image      = [[File:Vie quotidienne des Amérindiens en Nouvelle-France (XVIIIe siècle).jpg|300px]]
|image      = [[File:Vie quotidienne des Amérindiens en Nouvelle-France (XVIIIe siècle).jpg|300px]]
|population = '''114 million'''
|population = '''34.4 million'''
|popplace  =  
|popplace  = [[File:KiravFlag.png|text-bottom|frameless|upright=0.1]] '''[[Kiravian Federacy]]'''
|region1    = {{flagicon|KIR|size=25px}} '''[[Kiravian Federacy]]'''
|region1    = [[File:Manor Farm flag.png|text-bottom|frameless|upright=0.1]] [[Iunan State]]
|pop1      =
|pop1      = 4.8 million
|ref1      =  
|ref1      =  
|region2    =  
|region2    = [[File:Manor Farm flag.png|text-bottom|frameless|upright=0.1]] [[Sixua State]]
|pop2      =
|pop2      = 3.1 million
|ref2      =  
|ref2      =  
|region3    =  
|region3    = [[File:TealEnsign-Light.png|text-bottom|frameless|upright=0.1]] [[Northwest Territories]]
|pop3      =  
|pop3      = 2.5 million
|ref3      =  
|ref3      =  
|region4    =  
|region4    =  
Line 34: Line 34:
|pop10      =  
|pop10      =  
|ref10      =  
|ref10      =  
|languages  = Palæo-Kiravian languages, [[Kiravic Coscivian|Kiravic]]
|languages  = Palæo-Kiravian languages
|religions  = {{wp|Christianity}}, Traditional Religions, [[Ruricanism]]
|religions  = {{wp|Christianity}}, Traditional Religions, [[Islam]], [[Ruricanism]]
|related    = None known.
|related    = None known.
|footnotes  =  
|footnotes  =  
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==Definition==
==Definition==
The term ''Kiravite Aboriginal'' refers to those peoples endemic to the island continent of Great Kirav prior to the arrival of Coscivians in 13XX ''anno Domini''.
The definition of 'Aboriginal' that has guided Kiravian aboriginal policy since the [[Partholón Térunbuir|Térunbuir administration]] has been:


In sociological and public policy discourse, the term "Aboriginal" is usually reserved for Aboriginal groups that have not been significantly Coscivised, excluding groups such as the Kiorgiem and Indokwém who identify as Coscivians, practice a largely or mostly Coscivian culture, and may have significant Éorsan Coscivian ancestry. However, in ethnological and historical discourse, these groups are often considered Aboriginals.
{{Cquote|ethno-social communities having;
* continuity in lineage and identity with the inhabitants of Great Kirav prior to the arrival of the Elutic and Cosco-Adratic peoples,
* some meaningful continuity in language, culture, lifestyle, or social organisation with the same,
* a history of political autonomy from Coscivian polities and social separation from the Emperor’s subjects, and
* economic and developmental disadvantages compared to neighbouring communities not so distinguished.
|author= [[Executive College]]
|source= ''Order in regard to the Recognition of Indigenous Peoples''
}}
 
This definition encompasses a diverse collection of people groups, many of them small-numbered, across different language families, traditional lifestyles, phenotypes, religious traditions, and degrees and manners of differentiation from Coscivian and Coscivian-adjacent society. Although components of the standard definition have been criticised on various grounds, it is nonetheless the most widely used definition by government and civil society alike. According to Rifpito activist and scholar Yefes Ayefsipti, the classification of groups as Aboriginal or non-Aboriginal can seem arbitrary and artificial to urban Coscivians and to Western observers, but in regions with established Aboriginal populations the {{wp|Other (philosophy)|otherness}} of Aboriginality is an inescapable and deeply felt social reality. A point of agreement between the government and Aboriginal leaders is that Aboriginality is fundamentally an attribute of peoples and tribes, and that individuals are only Aboriginal by virtue of belonging to such a people.
 
In sociological and public policy discourse, usage of the term 'Aboriginal' normally excludes the Scheduled Minorities (who maintain a separate identity from Coscivians but have long histories of statehood and civil integration), as well as groups such as the Kiorgians and Indokwéans who are of heavily Palæo-Kiravian descent but identify as Coscivians. However, these groups may considered Aboriginals in anthropological and historical contexts.


==History==
==History==
===Prehistory===
===Speculative Origins===
The ultimate origin of the Aboriginal Kiravites remains a mystery. Genetic surveys have identified at least three distinct "founder populations" or "waves of settlement", depending on the model, but have been unable to reliably date the arrival of these groups or definitively match them with related populations elsewhere in the world. Archæological evidence, primarily the carbon-dating of biotic material embedded in primitive stone tools, seems to point to an arrival date for the earliest pioneers between 40,000 and 50,000 years ago, though it remains unclear whether the makers of these tools were ''Homo sapiens'' or other hominids, and even less clear whether their genetic line continues in modern Aboriginals.
<!--** The ultimate origin of the Aboriginal Kiravites remains a mystery. Genetic surveys have identified at least three distinct "founder populations" or "waves of settlement", depending on the model, but have been unable to reliably date the arrival of these groups or definitively match them with related populations elsewhere in the world. Archæological evidence, primarily the carbon-dating of biotic material embedded in primitive stone tools, seems to point to an arrival date for the earliest pioneers between 40,000 and 50,000 years ago, though it remains unclear whether the makers of these tools were ''Homo sapiens'' or other hominids, and even less clear whether their genetic line continues in modern Aboriginals.  
===Isolation Period===
Kiravian historians and anthropologists categorise the time between the immigration of the last Aboriginal "founder population" and the arrival of Arctic and Levantine peoples on Kiravian shores as the Isolation Period. The boundaries of this period are poorly defined, with the beginning date being purely theoretical and the end date rather vague due to lack of hard data. Nonetheless, the period of isolation has an upper bound of XXXX AD, as evidenced by findings of Celtic artifacts on the [[Mariava]] coast.


===Levantine and Arctic Contact===
Kiravian historians and anthropologists categorise the time between the immigration of the last Aboriginal "founder population" and the arrival of Arctic and Levantine peoples on Kiravian shores as the Isolation Period. The boundaries of this period are poorly defined, with the beginning date being purely theoretical and the end date rather vague due to lack of hard data. Nonetheless, the period of isolation has an upper bound of XXXX AD, as evidenced by findings of Celtic artifacts on the [[Mariava]] coast.** -->
Sometime between the X and Y centuries AD, Aboriginals living on the northern and eastern seaboards came into


===Coscivian Contact===
===Coscivian Migrations===
[Dark History]
[Deep History]
===Era 3===
===Modernity===
====Continental War====
====Continental War====
====Era of Expansion====
====Era of Expansion====
===Modernity===
===Kirosocialism===
===Post-Kirosocialism===


==Culture==
==Culture==
Kiravite Aboriginals are a polyphyletic group, divided among five apparently unrelated language families (and three language isolates) and exhibiting considerable variation in appearance. Their traditional religious practices can differ greatly between tribes, encompassing shamanism, totemism, vitalism, monotheism, universism, animism, spiritism, and combinations thereof.  
Kiravite Aboriginals are a polyphyletic group, divided among five apparently unrelated language families (and three language isolates) and exhibiting considerable variation in appearance. Their traditional religious practices can differ greatly between tribes, encompassing shamanism, totemism, vitalism, monotheism, universism, animism, spiritism, and combinations thereof. Today, most Aboriginals practice some form of Christianity or Islam, usually in syncresis with their previous beliefs and traditions. There have also been efforts to formalise and institutionalise wholly native belief systems in order to perpetuate them in modernity.


==Contemporary Social Characteristics==
==Contemporary Social Characteristics==